If you are expecting an answer like "Axolotl" you would be wrong because Axolotls are salamanders they are not fish. The Lungfish uses its fins to walk but swims well, The same applies to all of the other so called walking fish.
Frogfish for one
It is thought that millions of years ago, fish were able to walk on land, and they became adapted to swim over years, as their legs become fins
according to one internet site......the Tripod fish uses its fins mostly to stand, but can walk gently along the sea floor.
A Mudskipper is one of the fish that can walk on land.
Fish are born to swim, they learn naturally like we learn how to walk
Oh, dude, fish have fins, not limbs. Limbs are for land animals, you know, like us humans who can walk around and high-five each other. Fish are all about the fins, helping them swim gracefully through the water, not awkwardly flopping around on land.
Fish move primarily by using their fins to propel themselves through the water. They use their tail fin to generate thrust and their pectoral and dorsal fins to steer and stabilize themselves. The shape and movement of the fins allow fish to swim in different directions at varying speeds.
Seals have flippers while fish have fins. They are derived from the same structures but used by different classifications.
Mudskippers are amphibious fish, able to walk out of the water on their pectoral fins.
Fish can swim because they have streamlined bodies that reduce water resistance, paired fins that provide stability and maneuverability, and a swim bladder that helps with buoyancy control. These adaptations allow fish to move efficiently through water.
no.the axolotl are salamanders and the walking fish are actually fish that walk on their fins
Fish are aquatic creatures, and have fins to swim and gills to take oxygen from the water. Most reptiles are terrestrial, many have legs, and they breathe using lungs.